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Marketing a small, independently owned lodging business can be difficult. Marketing Essentials for Independent Lodgings outlines how to get a business’s name out there, attract consumers, and navigate the dicey world of social media and an online presence. Descriptions of traveler demographics, how to get the word out about a property, and how to make a property unique are all talked about at length. The goal of this book is to help small lodgings flourish, and it does so by including lists of actions that can be taken this week, this month, or this year to help positively impact the bottom line. Also included is a specific marketing outline that can be adapted to an individual business, giving business owners a timeline and plan they can follow.
The struggles of an enslaved African woman and two emigrant German farmers generate a sweeping saga of oppression, estrangement, and redeemed memory that binds together America's "Trail of Tears," South Africa's "Great Trek," and our contemporary search for reconciliation.
A register of French Americans in Mobile, Ala.
Uriah Mitchell (ca. 1799-ca. 1860) was born in either England or Bryan County, Georgia. His wife, Elizabeth (ca. 1810-?) was born in Georgia. They had seven children, Sara Jane (1825), William Wesley (1826), Lucinda (1828), Mary Ann or Polly (1831), John (1839), and Amanda (1846). They lived in Bulloch County, Georgia. Descendants lived in Georgia, South Caroline, Louisiana, Tennessee, Florida, California, and elsewhere. Includes Mitchell, Beasley, Davis, DeLoach, Denmark, Lanier, Martin, Smith, Waters and others.
Announcements for the following year included in some vols.
John Lanier was born 11 June 1830 in Davidson County, North Carolina. His parents were Benjamin Lanier and Anna. He married Nancy C. Morris (1831-1908), daughter of William Morris and Sarah, 24 March 1850 in Randolph County, North Carolina. They had eight children. John died in 1912 in Atlanta, Kansas. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Kansas.